Post on 09-Jan-2022
Decoding Global Ways of Working March 2021 By Rainer Strack, Orsolya Kovács-Ondrejkovic, Jens Baier, Pierre Antebi, Kate Kavanagh, and Ana López Gobernado
A study of 209,000 people in 190 countries hints at how workplaces will have to change in the future
Boston Consulting Group partners with leaders in business and society to tackle their most important challenges and capture their greatest opportunities. BCG was the pioneer in business strategy when it was founded in 1963. Today, we work closely with clients to embrace a transformational approach aimed at benefiting all stakeholders—empowering organizations to grow, build sustainable competitive advantage, and drive positive societal impact.
Our diverse, global teams bring deep industry and functional expertise and a range of perspectives that question the status quo and spark change. BCG delivers solutions through leading-edge management consulting, technology and design, and corporate and digital ventures. We work in a uniquely collaborative model across the firm and throughout all levels of the client organization, fueled by the goal of helping our clients thrive and enabling them to make the world a better place.
The Network is a global alliance of more than 60 leading recruitment websites, committed to finding the best talent in over 130 countries. Founded in 2002, The Network has become the global leader in online recruitment, serving more than 2,000 global corporations. We offer these corporations a single point of contact in their home countries, and allow them to work in a single currency and with a single contract— while giving them access to a global workforce. The recruitment websites in The Network attract almost 200 million unique visitors each month. For more information, please visit www.the-network.com.
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 1
Male Female
80 50 10 20 30 70 40 60
Education
Position
None/other1%
High school diploma or equivalent14%Secondary qualification14%
Doctorate orequivalent
2%
Master'sdegree or
postgraduatequalification
23%Bachelor's
degree46%
208,807Workforce respondents
Prefer notto say
Age distribution
Industry
51%2%
47%
Financialinstitutions
Healthcare
Travel andtourism
Industrialgoods
Insurance
Professionalservices
Technology Publicsector
Other
Retail
Energy MediaTelecom-munications
Nonprofit Legal
Consumer
5%18%
25%
52%
Ow
ner o
rse
nior
man
agem
ent
Mid
dle
man
agem
ent
Low
erm
anag
emen
t
No
man
agem
ent
resp
onsi
bilit
ies
14% 6%6%
4%
8%
1%
7% 6%
25%
6%
3% 2%3% 2% 1%
5%
Decoding Global Ways of WorkingThis is the second in a series about the pandemic’s long-term impact on work.
At times in the past year, it has seemed that “going to the office” was destined to become an antiquated activity, perhaps the subject of a future museum
exhibit whose artifacts would include conference rooms, whiteboards, entry badges, and foosball tables. The belief that work has changed irrevocably has been especially pronounced if you work in certain industries, live in certain countries, and travel in certain professional circles. But the idea has occurred to almost everyone.
We’re not there yet.
Although the pandemic has drawn attention to the upside of remote work, fully remote work—in which employees never set foot in an office—isn’t a model that people are clamoring for as they look toward the end of the pandemic. Rather, remote work is among a set of workplace attri-butes—along with friendly colleagues, ethnic and racial diversity, and a commitment to environmentally sound practices—that many employees will be seeking.
These preferences come through in a survey of 209,000 people in 190 countries by Boston Consulting Group and The Network. (See Exhibits 1 and 2.) We conducted the survey in October and November of 2020 and are publish-ing our findings in a series of reports. The first focused on people’s lower willingness, in a pandemic-altered era, to consider a job in a foreign country. After this second report on shifting work preferences, the series will continue with a look at evolving career expectations.
The survey was fielded when the second wave of COVID-19 cases was just beginning and many places weren’t in lock-down. (See the sidebar, “Methodology.”) The work-from-home percentages would almost certainly be higher if responses had been collected even a few weeks later. That said, the lower level of emergency that prevailed at the time of the survey may make the findings more reflective of the expectations people will have as the pandemic is increasingly brought under control.
Exhibit 1 - Demographics of Survey Respondents
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
Note: Some percentages do not total 100 because of rounding.
2 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
Exhibit 2 - A Survey of 208,807 Workforce Respondents in 190 Countries
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
≥5,000
500–999
50–499
<50
1,000–4,999
TurkeyRussiaDenmarkFranceGermany
IndonesiaPhilippinesSingaporeMalaysia
US
Mexico AngolaAlgeriaEgypt
HungaryKazakhstanNetherlandsPolandPortugal
ChinaThailand
Americas Middle East and Africa Europe Asia
Chile CameroonDemocratic Republic of the CongoJordanSenegalUnited Arab EmiratesZambia
AlbaniaAustriaBelarusBulgaria
ArgentinaBrazilCanada
BeninGabonIraqIranKenyaKuwaitLebanonLibyaMorocco
NigeriaOmanQatarSudanSyriaTogoTunisiaYemen
AzerbaijanBelgiumBosnia andHerzegovinaCyprusEstoniaGreeceItalyKosovo
KyrgyzstanLatviaLithuaniaSwedenUkraineUzbekistan
AustraliaIndiaNepalPakistan
5,000 or morerespondents
1,000–4,999respondents
500–999respondents
50–499respondents
Other Americas Other Middle East and Africa Other Europe Other Asia andPacific
Fewer than 50respondents
RomaniaSerbiaSloveniaUK
Ivory CoastSaudi ArabiaSouth Africa
FinlandIrelandLuxembourg
SpainSwitzerland
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 3
BCG and The Network (together with its affiliate organiza-tions) conducted this survey between October and early December of 2020. All told, 208,807 people, in 190 coun-tries, participated. The sample includes about an equal proportion of men and women, most of whom work in commercial industries. (The public sector and nonprofits are also represented.) The respondents are mostly early- and mid-career, and the majority are 20 to 40 years of age. Almost three-quarters of them have a bachelor’s degree or above.
The 40-question survey elicited workers’ attitudes regard-ing a variety of topics, including their willingness to work abroad, the countries (other than their own) that they would most like to work in, and the impact of COVID-19 on their work preferences, employment situation, and willing-ness to learn new skills.
The information gathered in the survey (which included people’s nationalities and level of hierarchy in their organi-zations) made it possible to analyze workers’ attitudes along a variety of parameters.
BCG also conducted follow-up Zoom interviews with select study participants around the world. Those interviews furnish the direct quotes that appear in this report.
Methodology
4 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
51%31%Fully or partially remoteFully or partially remote
% before COVID-19 % during COVID-19
Percentage of respondents who work from home, part- or full-time
7% 24% 69% 19% 32% 48%
Completely remote work Completely onsite workCombination of remote and onsite
Clarifying the Prevalence of Distance Work
One topic explored in the survey relates to the biggest change for many people: the rise of remote working. Most people’s sense of who has been working remotely, versus in a traditional physical setting, has been a projection based on their own experience. Our survey offers a more complete picture of what has been happening. Slightly more than half of all respondents globally were working remotely when the survey was conducted, either all the time or as part of a hybrid model with some days onsite. (See Exhibit 3.)
The type of job people hold is a major factor in their likeli-hood to be working remotely. An average of 70% of people in digital and knowledge-based jobs are now working re-motely at least some of the time. Average work-from-home proportions are considerably lower (about 51%) for tradi-tional office jobs, such as sales and purchasing. For jobs that require the handling of physical goods or contact with clients, the average is lower still. For example, only about 20% of people with manufacturing jobs said they are work-ing remotely some or all of the time. (See Exhibit 4.)
And there are nuances within categories, too. An engineer designing automation software is in all likelihood working from home at the moment. A hardware engineer, or an engineer working on debugging a piece of equipment, may well be visiting a physical lab at least a few days a week.
Matej Hrapko, a mechanical engineer at an Austrian auto-motive company, knows firsthand about the boost the pandemic has given to remote working. Before the pan-demic, Hrapko never worked remotely. “Our company did not allow home office,” he explained. Amid shutdowns that kept many European workers out of the office, though, he and his colleagues gravitated to communication tools such as Skype and found new ways to collaborate. “COVID has brought some great progress in our ways of working that we would like to keep,” he said.
A closer look at the remote work trend shows that even within similar job categories, there are major differences by country of residence. (See Exhibit 5.) Remote work has most firmly taken root in Western Europe, especially in countries hit hard by COVID-19. The Netherlands and the UK lead all countries in the percentage of people who are working remotely, with Luxembourg and France also rank-ing high. More than 85% of these countries’ digital and knowledge-based workers said they were working from home at least periodically in October and November 2020, far above the global average. (We used a single job catego-ry to ensure that country-to-country comparisons would be meaningful, but the percentage differences hold across most job categories.)
Exhibit 3 - Before and After: How COVID-19 Has Changed Work Models
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 5
% before COVID-19
% during COVID-19
Fully remote Partially remote
1111
91410
64
17
31223
83131
2626
29
569
410
45
30212923172119
4
654
823
2019
1612
Digitization and analyticsIT and technology
Marketing and communications
ConsultingMedia and information
Arts and creative workScience and research
Law
Management
Administration
Finance and auditing
Health and medicine
SalesHuman resourcesCustomer service
Purchasing and logistics
Social care
Engineering and technicalRetail, hospitality, and other services
Manual work and manufacturing
Digital and knowledge-based jobs
Traditional office jobs
Physical and social jobs
Total
4139474441463130
35263828282525
2728252116
Digitization and analyticsIT and technology
Marketing and communications
ConsultingMedia and information
Arts and creative workScience and research
Law
Management
Administration
Finance and auditing
Health and medicine
SalesHuman resourcesCustomer service
Purchasing and logistics
Social care
Engineering and technicalRetail, hospitality, and other services
Manual work and manufacturing
Digital and knowledge-based jobs
Traditional office jobs
Physical and social jobs
3840313832352019
39354
3354031
4142
17191816
1413
29
40373
437
233232
1115119
6
31272
820
14
Total Avg.
70
51
34
7775747371676261
57555353514645
4242392919
Different kinds of workers and the models they have used
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
Note: Percentages may be affected by rounding.
Exhibit 4 - Digital and Knowledge Workers Have Been the Fastest to Embrace Remote Models
6 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
UK
Percentage of digital and knowledge-based workers in each country who have worked remotely
Completely remote work Combination of remote and onsite work
JordanHungary
Ireland
ChileFrance
Netherlands
Malaysia
South Africa
Philippines
Luxembourg
Germany
DenmarkFinlandPoland
Mexico
Spain
Switzerland
PortugalSingapore
SloveniaAustria
90 5190 5187 3987 4987 2986 4186 2486 4585 6585 3385 5284 4683 4082 3681 4381 4680 3779 4278 5977 2875 4774 31
% duringCOVID-19
% beforeCOVID-19
Algeria
Bulgaria
United Arab EmiratesRomania
US
Russia
Indonesia
Turkey
Albania
Angola
Thailand
SerbiaZambiaBelarus
EgyptCameroon
Democratic Republicof the Congo
SenegalKazakhstan
Saudi Arabia
Ivory CoastChina
73 4372 4269 5269 4267 3567 3464 2564 3562 3556 5255 3753 4753 3552 4552 3750 4150 4047 3846 4146 3245 3037 33
Exhibit 5 - Europe Leads in Remote Work; Less Developed Regions Trail
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
Note: Percentages may be affected by rounding.
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 7
The technical infrastructures and prior work practices in these countries—including an inclination to accommodate employees who need to work from home periodically—seem to have enabled a relatively seamless shift to remote work. These countries also have a clear motivation to support social-distancing protocols given their high COVID-19 numbers. (See Exhibit 6 for a correlation be-tween COVID cases and remote work.)
In other countries, a sense that COVID has largely been vanquished is pushing work models in the other direction. This may explain why most Chinese and Saudi Arabian dig-ital workers are once again back in a physical office. (Chi-nese digital workers are now the least likely to be working from home of any digital workers in the world.) There are also low remote work numbers in some countries where COVID cases were never high to begin with—Thailand, for example. Ivory Coast, Senegal, and Cameroon have like-wise mostly avoided COVID-19—but the low work-from-home numbers in these sub-Saharan African nations may also have to do with their infrastructure limitations.
The two factors of preexisting digital work practices and virus aversion seem to explain most countries’ proportion of remote working. There are, of course, many nuances. Finland, Denmark, and Ireland, for instance, have high levels of remote work despite low COVID-19 caseloads. These European countries have seen how quickly COVID cases have spiked elsewhere and likely want to avoid a similar outcome, along with the economic disruption that would ensue. The same is true of some of the high-per-centage remote work countries in Asia, including Malaysia, Philippines, and Singapore, where the virus has been well controlled. All of these countries, it may be said, are doing what they can to keep the genie in the bottle.
The US is in the middle of all countries on the proportion of remote work, despite having a very high per capita inci-dence of COVID-19. Sixty-nine percent of US digital and IT workers have been doing some remote work during the pandemic, very close to the global average. While this is not a low proportion, it falls significantly below that of many countries that have done a better job of pandemic management.
Percentage of digital and knowledge-based workers in each country who have worked remotely
55,000
80
30,000
60
40
45
65
0
70
45,000 10,000 20,000 15,000
85
75
90
95
25,000
50
35,000
55
40,000 50,000
100
30
35
Finland
Indonesia
COVID-19 cases per 1 million inhabitants as of November 26, 2020
MalaysiaPhilippines Switzerland
Saudi Arabia
Slovenia
RomaniaSingapore
Portugal
NetherlandsFrance
Belarus
Zambia
% o
f res
pond
ents
wor
king
fully
or p
artia
lly re
mot
ely
Thailand Albania
Austria
Bulgaria
Denmark
Egypt
Germany
Ireland
United Arab Emirates
Poland Luxembourg
Russia Serbia
Spain
Turkey
UK
China
ChileJordan
Cameroon
USAngola
Algeria
Hungary
Ivory Coast
KazakhstanSenegal
South Africa
Mexico
Asia-Pacific Latin America and CaribbeanEurope and Central Asia Middle East and North Africa North America Sub-Saharan Africa
Exhibit 6 - How Remote Work and Virus Response Are Correlated
Sources: World Health Organization COVID-19 cases; 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
Note: Countries shown had more than 500 respondents. Curved dotted line indicates regression for the countries displayed.
8 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
Attitudes About Flexible Working After the Pandemic
Working from home isn’t new. Before the pandemic, how-ever, many companies were still treating it as an occasion-al practice allowed only for certain employees. COVID-19 has democratized distance work. The details vary, but it’s clear that overall remote work awareness has created an expectation that will outlive the crisis.
This came through in a part of the survey where respon-dents were asked where they would prefer to work in the future. Nine out of ten said they want to work remotely at least some of the time, significantly higher than the 51% of people who were working remotely when the survey was conducted, some seven months into the pandemic. But only a relatively small proportion of workers—one in four—would switch to a completely remote model if they could. The rest like the idea of a combination of home days and office days. (See Exhibit 7.) And it is indeed flexibility that most people are interested in, not a 180-degree turn in the traditional model that would have everyone working from home all the time and never going to a physical work location.
“An ideal model for me would be to work from home Mondays and Fridays and go to the office the rest of the week,” said Tomilola Abiodun, who works in marketing for a major US software manufacturer. While it took Abiodun a little while to get into the groove of remote work, she now has what she considers a professional home setup and said she has been much more productive.
This wish for flexibility is not limited to those with digital, knowledge, or office jobs. The preference for occasional home office days is evident even among people who have not worked from home at all during the pandemic and in sectors that haven’t historically had a way to do distance work, including social care, services, and manufacturing. In many of these seemingly less flexible industries, there’s a big gap between the desire for remote work and the inci-dence of it. For instance, only 29% of health and medical workers and 19% of manufacturing workers have been working remotely during the pandemic, despite 79% and 70% of them, respectively, wishing they could. (See Exhibit 8.) It may be that these respondents are unrealistic about what’s possible. Or the responses may be indicative of work model changes destined to transform even more industries.
24% 9% 25% 23% 7% 11%
5 days 4 days 0 days 2 days 3 days 1 day
89%Fully or partially remote
Completely remote work Completely onsite workCombination of remote and onsite
How many days per week people would like to work from home, by percentage of respondents
Exhibit 7 - The Future: How People Would Work If Given a Choice
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 9
Even workers in manual, health care, and social jobs want to work from home occasionally.
10 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
To the extent that there is an appetite for fully remote work, that appetite seems not to be in the most economi-cally advanced countries. For instance, residents of the Netherlands, Luxembourg, France, Denmark, and Fin-land—who are among the most likely nationalities to be working from home now—are among the least likely to say they would be okay with never going to the office again. (See Exhibit 9.) China’s workers are similarly uneasy about a future that would have them not working together physi-cally with their colleagues.
The enthusiasm for fully remote work is highest in develop-ing countries, including parts of Africa. (In our first report in this series, we noted that African respondents were among those expressing the highest interest in remote international work, in which a person accepts a job with a
foreign employer but performs the work in his or her own home country.) The different attitudes about fully remote work may reflect differences in transportation systems, including the time and effort needed to get to the office in one city or country versus another. Companies in highly developed countries may also invest more in their office spaces or to create workplace amenities, making their employees more eager to be on site.
In a bit of a surprise, Americans are near the top of all nationalities in their appetite for fully remote work, with 35% of US respondents saying they would be happy to work from home permanently. In part, this might reflect the huge cost-of-living differences between big US cities where many large businesses are located and the more affordable suburbs and towns where many Americans
Remote work expectations in the future versus what’s happening today
IT andtechnology
Digitizationand
analytics
Consulting
Marketing andcommunications
Media andinformation
% of workers who would like to work fully or partially remotely % of workers who currently work fully or partially remotely
Arts andcreative
work
Scienceand
research
Law
Management
Finance andauditing
Humanresources
Customerservice
Purchasingand logistics
Administration
Engineeringand
technical
Retail,hospitality,and otherservices
Social care
Health andmedicine
Manualwork and
manufacturing
Sales
Digital and knowledge-based jobs Traditional office jobs Physical andsocial jobs
88 9195 95 95 95 93 93 929488 92
8789 868982 79 79
7077 75 74 73 71 6762 61 57 55 53 53 51
46 45 42 42 3929
19
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
Exhibit 8 - Desired Work Model of Workers in 20 Job Roles
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 11
Completely remote work Combination of remote and onsite work Completely onsite work
Philippines
South Africa
Zambia
Romania
India
Saudi Arabia
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Bulgaria
Angola
Egypt
US
Mexico
Spain
Albania
United Arab Emirates
Senegal
Cameroon
Kazakhstan
Serbia
Jordan
Portugal
UK
Chile
Malaysia
Belarus
Algeria
Russia
Indonesia
Ivory Coast
Hungary
Singapore
Poland
Ireland
Turkey
Thailand
Austria
Finland
Slovenia
Luxembourg
Netherlands
Germany
France
China
Switzerland
Denmark0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Exhibit 9 - Different Levels of Enthusiasm for Fully Remote Work
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
Note: Countries shown had at least 500 survey participants.
12 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
might live if they didn’t have to go to an office. The 35% makes the US the highest-ranked developed country for fully remote work and the tenth-ranked country on this measure overall.
The desire for flexibility does not stop at location; it ex-tends to work time as well. Only 36% of respondents glob-ally say they want a traditional 9-to-5 job with fully fixed hours. The largest proportion (44%) would prefer a combi-nation of fixed and flexible time, which could take the form of a daily window of a few hours when everyone is required to work and flexibility regarding the remaining required time. (Another 20% of respondents would like to have complete timing flexibility, with no fixed work hours at all.) Flexibility relating to when one is at one’s desk is obviously helpful to the work-from-home model in that it allows for personal preferences and family commitments. Of course, the model also requires discipline on the part of the re-mote worker and a reverse sort of flexibility so that col-leagues in other time zones aren’t forever unable to en-gage the remote worker in real time.
COVID-19’s Impact on Workplace Culture and Effectiveness
The pandemic’s impact on people’s work experience goes well beyond the dimension of where and during which hours jobs get done. The way people collaborate, the tools they use, the effectiveness of their work, and their well-be-ing have also been affected.
One big change is people’s increasing facility with using digital tools for work. (See Exhibit 10.) Even industries that haven’t traditionally thought of themselves as high tech have become heavy users of Zoom, Slack, file-sharing solutions, and virtual flip charts. “We were not used to working with digital tools before,” said Anne Granelli, who manages a medical center in Sweden. “COVID-19 has shown us that anything is possible remotely, even medical consultations.”
The improved use of digital tools during the pandemic was noted by people in every industry and every location. In terms of job roles, people who do digital and IT work are the most likely to say they have become better at using digital tools because of the pandemic, followed by people in consulting. Muriel Giroud-Villaine, an independent French consultant who works with companies in the min-ing, pharmaceutical, and technology fields, said she has learned to speak more slowly in Zoom calls than she does in person and to ask more questions. This is to compen-sate for “all the nonverbal cues that I don’t get anymore,” she said.
Strongly negativeImpact of COVID-19 Negative Neutral Strongly positivePositive
17%
27%
19%
11%
35%17%4%
23%
7%
8%
Use of digital tools
6%
20%
6%
20%15%8%
20%
Flexibility in whenand where to work
20% 8%
21%
23%21%21%
8%
Team collaboration
7%20%20%9% 21%Effectiveness
19%10% 22%22%
17%
Work-life balance
19%
13%
Quality and style of leadership 19%22%
28%
11%
18%18%Well-being of employees
Total score
0.56
0.17
0.04
–0.02
–0.08
–0.08
–0.24
Exhibit 10 - COVID-19’s Impact on Different Areas of Work
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
Note: Total score was calculated as the average of answers ranging from +2 (strongly positive) to –2 (strongly negative).
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 13
64%
The Desire for Flexible Hours
Sixty-four percent of workers would prefer to have flexible hours. Only 36% want a traditional 9-to-5 job.
14 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
The other area where the pandemic has had an unmistak-able impact is on employee well-being. Most people said they feel they are still getting the job done—the barely changed perceptions of team collaboration and organiza-tional effectiveness underscore this—but that feeling has come at the cost of their well-being, to some degree. This was true of every respondent cohort, but lower well-being was especially pronounced among service-sector and manual workers. These are the workers who, during the pandemic, have had to travel to their jobs and who often work in physical teams. For some of these workers, the increased risk of contracting the virus and the discomfort of having to wear masks for hours at a time may have turned work into something to be dreaded.
(One thing that—surprisingly—didn’t show up in the data is a difference based on gender or family circumstances. People with families were no more likely to say that the pandemic lowered their well-being or work-life balance than were people without families. Nor was there an appreciable difference by gender in response to these questions.)
Shifting Attitudes Toward What Matters on the Job
Apart from work location and work practices, the survey also identified some shifts in what people value at work.
In our last study, in 2018, people said that they expected their jobs to provide them with a mix of both short- and long-term benefits. Job seekers at the time wanted to be surrounded by people they liked, and they wanted their jobs to give them time for outside activities too. The 2018 survey respondents also expected to get some long-term benefits from work—specifically, a chance to develop new skills and advance their careers.
Today, these long-term attributes are much further down the list. It’s all about the here and now—people care the most about the colleagues and manager they work with and a good work-life balance. Meanwhile, personal finan-cial security has jumped in importance. (See Exhibit 11.) Indeed, it would be surprising if people weren’t saying this, given the economic and existential crisis everyone has experienced.
Good work-life balance
2014 2018 Today
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Appreciation for your work
Appreciation for your work
Appreciation for your work
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good work-life balance
Good work-life balance
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Financial stability of employer
Financial stability of employer
Financial stability of employer
Careerdevelopment
Careerdevelopment
Careerdevelopment
Jobsecurity
Jobsecurity
Jobsecurity
Financial compensation
Financial compensation
Interestingjob content
Interestingjob content
Interestingjob contentCompany values
Learning and skills training
Learning and skills training
Financial compensation
How different attributes rank now versus in the past
Exhibit 11 - The Most Basic Reward of All—Pay—Has Surged in Importance
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 15
More than half of respondents would
refuse to work for an employer whose
social and environmental policies
don’t match their beliefs.
16 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
4
5
Latin Americaand Caribbean
North America
Asia-PacificMiddle Eastand North Africa
Europe andCentral Asia
Sub-SaharanAfrica
France Germany
Brazil Mexico China India Indonesia Philippines Algeria Egypt United ArabEmirates
Spain Poland Russia Democratic Republic of the Congo
Saudi Arabia
Turkey South African USUK
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Appreciation for your work
Good relationships with colleagues
Financial compensation
Financial compensation
Financial compensation
Financial stability of employer
Financial stability of employer
Financial stability of employer
Financial stability of employer
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Company values
Company values
Career development
Career development
Career development
Career development
Career development
Career development
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Good relationships with colleagues
Learning andskills training
Learning andskills training
Learning andskills training
Learning andskills training
Financial stability of employer
Learning andskills training
Learning andskills training
Learning andskills training
Learning andskills training
Financial stability of employer
Financial stability of employer
Financial stability of employer
Financial stability of employer
Good work-life balance
Good work-life balance
Good work-life balance
Good work-life balance
Career development
Career development
Good work-life balance
Good work-life balance
Good work-life balance
Good work-life balance
Good work-life balance
Job security
Job security
Job security
Job security
Appreciation for your work
Appreciation for your work
Employer reputation
Job security
Good work-life balance
Financial compensation
Financial compensation
Opportunities to lead
Good work-life balance
Company values Company values
Good work-life balance
Good work-life balance
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Appreciation for your work
Appreciation for your work
Appreciation for your work
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Good relationship with superior
Interestingjob content
Interestingjob content
Interestingjob content
Job security Job security
Job security
Interestingjob content
Interestingjob content
Exhibit 12 - Top Workplace Attributes, by Respondents’ Location
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
There is some variation, by region, in what workers are focused on. For instance, financial attributes are central for workers in China, Russia, and Poland. Good relationships and a desire to be appreciated for the work one does re-main the top priorities in Europe; they are also important in the US. European and US HR departments will have to figure out how to foster these feelings at a time when COVID-19 protocols are still keeping many employees and managers physically separated. And some African, Middle Eastern, and Latin American countries are exceptions to the lower importance of learning and career development. Those long-term goals remain near the top of the list in parts of these geographies. (See Exhibit 12.)
COVID-19 is not the only event in the past year that has changed people’s expectations about work. The Black Lives Matter protests and the #MeToo movement have job seek-ers paying more attention to social values in the workplace. And a succession of climate catastrophes, including the Australian bushfires of 2019 and 2020, have prompted some job seekers to question prospective employers’ environmental commitment.
Roughly seven in ten respondents said diversity and cli-mate had become more important issues in the last year. (The younger the cohort, the higher the likelihood of the issue growing in importance.) And half of all workers said they would not accept a job with an employer whose poli-cies in these areas didn’t match their personal beliefs. (See Exhibit 13.)
Awareness of social issues has certainly risen for software marketer Tomilola Abiodun. “The BLM events really affect-ed me,” said Abiodun, a 29-year-old Black woman from Nigeria who has been in the US for four years. “I have always thought that inclusion and diversity were important, but 2020 showed me it could be a deal breaker for me if a company did not have these core values.” Her employer has “responded very well to the BLM movement,” she added, with colleagues calling her to see how she is doing.
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 17
What the New Attitudes Mean for Employers
The preferences about future work that the survey found aren’t all surprising. But the findings show how deeply root-ed some new attitudes have become. The question for employers: How to respond?
First, develop a thoughtful remote work strategy. For all the publicity that has greeted a few high-profile staff-can-work-from-home-forever declarations, fully remote work is rarely the right answer—and for many companies it is not a possibility. Instead, the right remote work strate-gy will come to companies that do four things:
• Differentiate by job role. Certain job roles, by their nature, are better suited to remote work than others. Companies should think in terms of personas—the ac-tivities performed as part of certain jobs, the experiences of the people who perform them, and how a shift to a remote work model would affect those people. For many companies, there will be jobs that could all be remote by design and other jobs where working from home can be no more than an occasional perk.
• Balance governance with flexibility. Companies should introduce guidelines to help workers understand the choices they have. (The guidelines should leave some room for employees’ personal preferences.) Those for whom remote work isn’t a possibility should not be left feeling that nothing is being done for them. Consider offering such workers other benefits, such as additional days off.
• Provide the right enablers. A year into the pandem-ic, many companies have already made sure that their workers have the infrastructure and tools they need to work effectively from home. For companies planning to support remote work on a more permanent basis, the next step is to adapt their ways of collaborating. Imple-menting agile work practices in virtual settings (through virtual daily standup meetings or online team rooms with digital whiteboards) can help teams replace the everyday, in-person meetings they used to stay in touch in more normal times.
The issue of diversity and inclusion became more important to me over the last year
69.6%
The issue of environmental responsibility became more important to me over the last year
I would exclude companies that don't match my beliefs in diversity and inclusion
I would exclude companies that don't match my beliefs in environmental responsibility
Environment Diversity and inclusion
51.8%
By age group
By age group
51.4%
By age group
68.7%
By age group
21 - 30
74%
41 - 50≤20
64%73%
31 - 40 51 - 60 >60
68% 61% 59%
21 - 30 ≤20 31 - 40
54%
41 - 50 51 - 60 >60
49%53% 52% 47% 47%
77%
51 - 60 ≤20
73%
21 - 30 >60 31 - 40 41 - 50
68% 66% 68% 67%
51 - 60 21 - 30 ≤20 31 - 40
55% 51%
41 - 50 >60
58% 49%48% 47%
Percentage of respondents who agree with the following statements
Exhibit 13 - A Greater Focus on Environmental and Social Issues
Source: 2020 BCG/The Network proprietary web survey and analysis.
18 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
• Experiment, and monitor success. Even with the head start on remote work that companies have gotten, there aren’t many situations where the processes are already perfected and no further adjustments are need-ed. So, whatever models are chosen, companies should start with small pilots and ensure good data collection on employee experience and productivity. The insights from these pilots can then be used to design remote work models for other parts of the organization.
Second, build a culture that emphasizes interperson-al relationships and societal values. The higher ranking of pay and financial stability in this year’s survey is notable. But these are also end goals that come with some inherent constraints—all the more reason why companies should focus on some of the softer attributes that may make a difference. Four steps will give organizations a shot at making this shift:
• Prepare leaders for the world that’s coming. Lead-ership models will be different postpandemic. People in management and executive positions will need to be more multifaceted and adopt an attitude of trust rather than trying to monitor everything. The best leaders will also be technology champions, allowing them to support their organization’s switch to remote work.
• Use virtual tools to build personal connections with employees. The informal communication that typ-ically takes place in an office must be made more formal in a remote work dynamic, whether through the use of online buddy systems, virtual “water cooler chats,” or Zoom team evenings. Managers should also seek to get regular feedback on how employees are feeling, given that their employees may be out of sight on many days. Quick pulse-check surveys (with only a few questions) and mobile apps can make it easier to stay connected.
• Take a holistic approach to employee well-being. Many companies are already paying attention to the physical health of workers by making their offices more “touchless,” their common areas more hygienic, and their workspaces more socially distanced. Postpandemic, companies may want to put more emphasis on their mental health offerings as well, by supporting stress relief through yoga classes, meditation sessions, and gym memberships. As part of this effort, managers could get training in how to handle employees’ personal and emotional challenges.
• Get serious about making a positive impact. Not ev-ery company is in a position to address the full gamut of the world’s social and environmental needs. But compa-nies should figure out which issues they can realistically act on and what practices they want to follow to build an inclusive workplace. In those areas, they should set tar-gets and look at key performance indicators. Employers should also take a more active stand on the topics that matter to them and encourage employees to contribute by giving them time off for social impact activities.
As headquarters and other physical offices reopen in the coming months, workers will inevitably be wondering
how the organizations they’re returning to have changed. They’ll be grateful about the paycheck that came their way during the pandemic. But they’ll also return to their work-places with new expectations—of reimagined remote work policies, of better on-the-job relationships, of organizations that share their social values. Organizations that step into this future now will have a huge advantage as the competi-tion for talent resumes postpandemic.
Next in the series: how the crisis has affected people’s career plans and prospects.
BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP X THE NETWORK 19
About the Authors
Rainer Strack is a managing director and senior partner in the Düsseldorf office of Boston Consulting Group. You may contact him by email at strack.rainer@bcg.com.
Orsolya Kovács-Ondrejkovic is an associate director in BCG’s Zurich office. She is a member of the People and Organization practice. You may contact her by email at kovacs.orsolya@bcg.com.
Jens Baier is a managing director and senior partner in BCG’s Düsseldorf office. You may contact him by email at baier.jens@bcg.com.
Pierre Antebi is a co–managing director of The Network and the business marketing director at Figaro Classifieds. He is based in Paris. You may contact him by email at pierre.antebi@the-network.com.
Kate Kavanagh is a co–managing director of The Network and the group international sales director at StepStone. She is based in the UK. You may contact her by email at kate.kavanagh@stepstone.com.
Ana López Gobernado is the international operations manager of The Network. She is based in Brussels. You may contact her by email at ana.lopez@the-network.com.
20 DECODING GLOBAL WAYS OF WORKING
Acknowledgments
We thank The Network’s member organizations for their role in distributing the survey and collecting responses around the world. We also thank the participants who completed the survey and those who participated in follow-up interviews.
Additionally, we extend our thanks to the members of the project team: Valeria Rondo-Brovetto, Bojan Divcic, Guillaume Epitaux, Jan Heming, Stephane Lacour, June Limberis, Philipp Löwer, Katerina Mala, and other colleagues from BCG and The Network for their insights, research, coordination, and analysis.
Additionally, we thank Allison Bailey, Christopher Daniel, Deborah Lovich, Fanny Potier, Fang Ruan, Alexander Schudey, and Nick South for their contributions and insights.
We also thank Robert Hertzberg for his assistance in writing this report, and Katherine Andrews, Catherine Cuddihee, Kim Friedman, Abby Garland, and Shannon Nardi for their editing, design, and production contributions.
For Further Contact
If you would like to discuss this report, please contact the authors.
Boston Consulting Group partners with leaders in business and society to tackle their most important challenges and capture their greatest opportunities. BCG was the pioneer in business strategy when it was founded in 1963. Today, we help clients with total transformation—inspiring complex change, enabling organizations to grow, building competitive advantage, and driving bottom-line impact.
To succeed, organizations must blend digital and human capabilities. Our diverse, global teams bring deep industry and functional expertise and a range of perspectives to spark change. BCG delivers solutions through leading-edge management consulting along with technology and design, corporate and digital ventures—and business purpose. We work in a uniquely collaborative model across the firm and throughout all levels of the client organization, generating results that allow our clients to thrive.
Uciam volora ditatur? Axim voloreribus moluptati autet hario qui a nust faciis reperro vitatia dipsandelia sit laborum, quassitio. Itas volutem es nulles ut faccus perchiliati doluptatur. Estiunt. Et eium inum et dolum et et eos ex eum harchic teceserrum natem in ra nis quia disimi, omnia veror molorer ionsed quia ese veliquiatius sundae poreium et et illesci atibeatur aut que consequia autas sum fugit qui aut excepudit, omnia voloratur? Explige ndeliaectur magnam, que expedignist ex et voluptaquam, offici bernam atqui dem vel ius nus.
Nem faccaborest hillamendia doluptae conseruptate inim volesequid molum quam, conseque consedipit hillabo. Imaio evelenditium haribus, con reictur autemost, vendam am ellania estrundem corepuda derrore mporrumquat.
For information or permission to reprint, please contact BCG at permissions@bcg.com.
To find the latest BCG content and register to receive e-alerts on this topic or others, please visit bcg.com. Follow Boston Consulting Group on Facebook and Twitter.
© Boston Consulting Group 2021. All rights reserved.3/21